Termination
Q1, Q2, Q3 – 450 words ($7.5) Q1. Reflect on Chapter 14: Project Closeout and Termination Identify what you thought was the most important concept(s), method(s), the term(s), and/or any other thing that you felt was worthy of your understanding. Also, provide a graduate-level response to each of the following questionsQ2. Why do so many projects end up terminated as a result of termination through starvation? Discuss the role that ego, power, and politics in this form of termination. Q3. Why do lessons learned programs often fail to capture meaningful information that could help guide future projects? ——————————————————————————————————————————————- Q4. Activity 13 in Separate document – 4 full pages(excluding references) ($20) Case Study 14.1New Jersey Kills Hudson River Tunnel Project This case illustrates the challenges in making an early termination decision. Often, particularly in the case of public projects, there is a real difficulty in stopping a project once it has gotten on the books. As a result, projects with huge cost overruns, like Bostons Big Dig are allowed to continue almost indefinitely. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie made a tough call in deciding to cancel the Hudson River Tunnel project because he was given a number of rosy projections that did not match the actual costs incurred to that date. This is a great case to let students pick sides: should Christie have canceled the project or not? There are arguments to be made that the need was strong (although others could argue that the need was over-sold). On the other hand, the history of the project to date and the uncertainty about future federal funding made it a real gamble, especially during a time of economic recession. Questions How would you respond to the argument that it is impossible to judge how successful a project like this one would have been unless you actually do it? Take a position, either pro or con, on Christies decision to kill the ARC. Develop arguments to support your point of view. In your opinion, how clearly must a large infrastructure project like ARC have determined its need, costs, and so forth before being approved? If the criteria are too stringent, what is the implication for future projects of this type? Would any ever be built? For more information on Termination read this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Termination